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When something doesn’t work, stop doing it. That includes awarding pointless big-ticket tax breaks.
We need to do better meeting the needs of a shamefully underpaid profession.
New York State’s proposed tax and spending plan continues a decade of disinvestment in its people.
Testimony before the Joint Legislative Hearing Committee on 2023-24 Executive Budget Proposal: Human Services
It’s time to end policies that result in harsh and racially biased disruption and harassment of families living in poverty.
Why is health care in New York City so expensive? The high and rapidly growing cost of private hospital care is the prime cause.
Despite Social Security, millions of Americans face economic hardship once their work lives end. We need to strengthen our retirement system.
By almost every measure, basic housing maintenance is spiraling downward. The City has the tools to turn that around.
This year’s titles include a multi-generational family saga intersecting with environmental apocalypse, a re-imagined Jazz Age crime story, and a YA novel of the Jersey Shore written in verse.
The street art that helped change the direction of Chilean politics, the folk music revolution that helped change American life, and more.
Testimony before the Assembly Standing Committee on Labor Subcommittee on Emerging Workforce Assembly Hearing to Address the Persistent Increase in People Leaving the Workforce, Focusing on the Factors Contributing to This Trend and Potential Solutions and Workers and Affected Industries
Strengthening New York City’s zoning requirements for last-mile warehouses will better protect the health and safety of workers and nearby residents.
An “emergency” remedy adopted by the State Board of Regents does no harm – but doesn’t do enough good, either.
Throughout the city, demand for housing outstrips supply. The Queens borough president’s answer is: We must build. Now.
City agencies could do a far better job matching the volunteers helping a flood of asylum seekers.
At the Supreme Court, the future of equal access to higher education hangs in the balance.
A comprehensive plan is needed to help migrants, and longstanding New Yorkers too, meet their housing needs.
Public benefits try, (and may fail) to meet survival needs. But what does a life with dignity require?
After the deadliest residential fire in decades, a borough president helps a community recover – and proposes policy changes to prevent future tragedies.
The process of applying for college financial aid regularly produces freakouts and meltdowns. But there may be help on the horizon.
A money-saving move to take City government retirees off Medicare appeared to have crashed and burned. But now a rescue plan has emerged from the wreckage.
A “terrifying” insight into maternal health risks leads to action.
A q&a with the co-founder of Bronx Móvil, a “project of radical love” involving unhoused people who use drugs.
An exodus from frontline service agencies is creating a crisis in local governments across the nation.
New FY2023 commitments at the State and City levels seek to open up access for families and support providers
Some 873,000 workers in major New York State low-paid industries are misclassified as independent contractors.
Our suggestions of new works from New School faculty and graduates to take with you this summer.
Nearly 4.5 people in the U.S. are still exposed to pollution from municipal waste incinerators.
A call to counter speculation and displacement with community-controlled housing and neighborhood development.
Honoring young people’s diverse cultures and lived experiences will help them learn – and also prepare them to be adults who civilly debate, advocate, and vote.
Transit costs often overwhelm the budgets of low-income New Yorkers. Many don’t even know that they’re eligible for half-price fares.
There’s a way to make “billionaires’ row” absentee condo owners pay a fairer tax share – and provide relief to lower-income homeowners, too.
A campaign for fair pay and safe working conditions reveals how being classified “independent contractors” denies workers fundamental protections.
The City should dramatically decrease pollution and increase safety and environmental justice in overhauling its massive commercial waste system.
A new policy breaks up cellblock “gang houses” and injects credible messengers to deescalate violence.
I’ve worked at Rikers Island. I’ve been detained there, too – twice. And a “let them loose on each other” attitude prevailed.
CNYCA's six-year statistical survey monitoring New York City's child welfare system
There has been a flood of what look like involuntary retirements of workers age 55 and up since March 2020.
As non-profits stumble and for-profits soar, what does that mean for patients and home health aides?
In a privatized system, public officials have regularly ducked tough choices. Will that now include fair pay for home care workers?
Locking up more kids on longer sentences didn’t make us safer in the past, and it won’t now. It just intensifies our problems.
The City’s stop-and-start pattern of curbside organic waste is self-defeating. Instead, it’s time to rethink the way we collect our waste.
What housing policies can New Yorkers expect from Mayor Eric Adams and Governor Kathy Hochul?
It’s the biggest housing development in the nation – and it played a surprising role in New York City’s near-death fiscal crisis in the 1970s.
What special burdens do people of color take on when they assume leadership of nonprofit organizations?
Is this the bold new project New York needs now? Or could it leave us with a nasty financial hangover?
Investing in workforce training and placement is the next, crucial phase of recovery from Covid-19’s job disruptions.
With supplies for detainees running low, community donors stepped in.
In the best, and worst, of times, State officials face some decisions.
New York City should beef up mental health resources instead of building up systems of enforcement and punishment
Environmental justice. High-tech cities. The meaning of baldness. All just some of what The New School community’s non-fiction writers had on their minds this year.
This year’s titles run from near-future dystopias to twisty psychological thrillers to a delightfully silly younger-set graphic novel.
Socially based trauma can be internalized, with devastating effects. It can also be healed.
Let’s recognize how a legacy of colonial oppression, and the everyday realities of structural racism, can warp and weaken family bonds.
Why not put the people’s money to work on behalf of the people? That’s the goal of creating a public bank.
I first went to Rikers at age 17, in chains. Now I’m back, because I choose to help others.
An immigrant delivery worker from Mexico says his dream is to be protected on the job and “live without fear.”
We have a housing crisis that’s also a public health emergency. Here are some things the next mayor can do about it.
New York City still lacks a coherent digital learning strategy. Here’s how to develop one.
Most City retirees and their dependents are about to be cut loose from traditional Medicare. What happens next?
A former principal describes her vision for beginning to make schools into “incubators of citizenship and success.”
Covid-19 puts young people aging out of foster care at immediate, heightened risk of homelessness and unemployment.
The author of a new book on homelessness in Seattle looks at how an upcoming referendum on this issue is shaping up.
The time is ripe for a holistic strategy to strengthen historically traumatized communities.